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SAFE COMMUNITIES

SAFE COMMUNITIES. Getting Started. America’s Problem . from Intentional & Unintentional Injuries Annually. 150,000 deaths per year 2,850,000 hospitalizations $325 billion cost to society American culture accepts traffic deaths/injuries as routine. Rail/Transit 1.3%.

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SAFE COMMUNITIES

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  1. SAFE COMMUNITIES Getting Started

  2. America’s Problem from Intentional & Unintentional Injuries Annually • 150,000 deaths per year • 2,850,000 hospitalizations • $325 billion cost to society • American culture accepts traffic deaths/injuries as routine

  3. Rail/Transit 1.3% Swim/Boat 1.5% Transportation Related Injuries DEATHS & HOSPITALIZATIONS due to TRAUMA Assault 11.1% Self-inflicted 9.1% Falls 9.1% Bicyclist 6.1% Fires/Burns 6.1% Motorcyclist 6.1% Struck by Object 7.1% Pedestrian 12.1% All Others 7.1% Motor Vehicle Occupant 23.3% TOTAL = 50%

  4. INJURY CO$T$ ARE ENORMOUS Crashes cost society $150 Billion annually – OF THAT AMOUNT: • $17 Billion is medical costs • 37.5 Billion is employer costs • $54.7 Billion is lost productivity

  5. Defining Safe Communities • Safe Communities is a process, not a program. • Safe Communities is a coalition centered, data driven prevention model. • Safe Communities emphasizes motor vehicle crashes as a leading injury prevention issue.

  6. Defining Safe Communities • Safe Communities looks at transportation injuries and their costs. • Safe Communities is most successful when the coalition involves new partners in the process. • Safe Communities is geographic-based and involves local citizens.

  7. History of Safe Communities • First used as an injury prevention model by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 1989 • Adopted by NHTSA to address traffic related injuries in 1995 • Nearly 900 Safe Communities exist nationwide.

  8. Why we need aSafe Communities Coalition • Injuries are not accidents. • Injuries are predictable and preventable • Local people are in the best position to solve local problems. • Every community has effective organizations working to prevent injuries.

  9. Safe CommunitiesGetting Started Checklist • Form a core community coalition • Create a community profile • Examine local injury data • Prioritize injury problems using data • Organize coalition with subcommittees • Identify/implement prevention strategies • Measure impact and cost benefits

  10. Safe CommunitiesForming a Coalition • Identify and recruit stakeholders • Find host or lead organizations • Appoint Safe Communities Coordinator • Enlist Keepers of the data • Recruit injury data expert • Identify meeting times & places

  11. Safe CommunitiesBuilding a Community Profile • Demographics (age, ethnic background, gender) • Roadway user behavioral data • Environmental data • Citizen & Community Leader Input

  12. Safe CommunitiesLooking at Injury Data • *Emergency department • *Hospital discharge • *Emergency run report • Police crash reports • Trauma registry *HIPAA now in effect

  13. Safe CommunitiesPrioritizing Injury Problems • Significant contributor to fatal and nonfatal injuries • Significant contributor to health care costs • Disproportionately affects specific population groups • Major concern of community residents

  14. Safe CommunitiesIdentifying Coalition Members • Transportation • Insurance companies • Law enforcement • Businesses • Hospitals/physicians • Public health • Schools & colleges • Traffic safety groups • EMS • Citizen advocates • Military bases • Civic clubs

  15. Safe CommunitiesImplementing Interventions • Enforcement strategies • Enact laws or policies • Education/awareness strategies • Engineering and technology improvements • Evaluating results

  16. Safe CommunitiesExamples of Traffic Issues • Alcohol impaired driving • Non seat belt use • Non or misuse of child car seats • Pedestrian collisions • Speeding or aggressive drivers • Inexperienced drivers • Distracted drivers • Red light running

  17. Safe CommunitiesMeasuring the results • Number of injuries • Hospital costs • Emergency room visits • Behavioral change • Local policies or ordinances • Community attitudes • Community resources

  18. Safe CommunitiesSuccess Stories • Fargo, ND • College Outreach • South West Coalition of Safe Communities, Dickinson • Heaven Can Wait • Northern Valley Safe Communities, Grand Forks • Winners Buckle Up • Mayors Council for Safe Communities, Minot • Teen Week • Region 3 Safe Communities, ND • Buckle Up in Your Truck • And hundreds more…

  19. Safe CommunitiesTaking it to the Streets Get your community in action!

  20. NHTSA Safe CommunitiesResources On the Web WWW.NHTSA.DOT.GOV Under Traffic Safety button

  21. NHTSA Safe Communities Resources Service Center • Location: • Safe Communities Service Center • NHTSA South Central Region • 819 Taylor Street • Room 8A38 • Fort Worth, TX 76102 • (817) 978-3614 • safe.communities@dot.gov

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